Cecropia tolimensis was described from material from 
Tolima, much to the north of the Huila locality of 
Schultes & Villarreal 5128 which represents the second 
collection of the species to be reported. 
Cotoms1A: Departamento del Huila, Pitalito, Calamo, open fields. 
Altitude about 1300 m. December 30, 1942, Richard Evans Schultes 
& M. Villarreal 5128. 
Coussapoa intermedia Martius ex Miquel in Mar- 
tius Fl. Bras. 4, pt. 1 (1858) 133. 
Coussapoa intermedia, hitherto known from Amazon- 
ian Pert and Brazil, is now recorded for the flora of 
Colombia. 
Cotoms1a: Comisaria del Amazonas, Rio Loretoyacu. ‘‘Large tree.’’ 
October 20-30, 1945, Richard Evans Schultes 6726. 
Coussapoa magnifolia 7?écu/ in Ann. Sci. Nat., 
ser. 3, 8 (1847) 98. 
Although Coussapoa magnifolia is known from eastern 
Pert, I have been unable to find other collections of 
this species from Colombia. 
Cotoms1a: Comisaria del Amazonas, Rio Loretoyacu. ‘“Epiphyte.’’ 
October 20-30, 1949, Richard Evans Schultes 6693. 
OLACACEAE 
Heisteria cyanocarpa Poeppig & Endlicher Nov. 
Gen. ac Sp. 3 (1845) 35, t. 241. 
In Macbride’s ‘‘Flora of Peru’’ (Field Mus. Publ. 
Bot. 13, pt. 2, no. 2 (1987) 423), Standley gives, as the 
distribution of this species, eastern Perti and Amazonian 
Brazil. Apparently it has not been recorded as an ele- 
ment of the Colombian flora, although it is frequent in 
the southern part of the Colombian Amazonia. Several 
of the collections cited as Peruvian, however, are actually 
from Colombian territory and attest the frequency of 
this shrub, especially in the trapécio amazdénico. Ll. 
pice 
